slow-wave sleep
[
sloh
-
weyv
]
/ˈsloʊˈweɪv/
noun
,
Physiology
1.
a recurrent period of deep sleep, typically totaling five or six hours a night, distinguished by the presence of slow brain waves and by very little dreaming.
Also called
S sleep
.
Compare
REM sleep
.
Origin
1965-70